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Suicide Pace – A Race Report by Ned Cunningham

Before Comeback Runner of the Year Ned Cunningham made his way to Lehigh for a very successful run at the XC Club Nationals, he led the way for the Whippets in this tune-up held in Van Cortlandt Park, on one of the very toughest XC courses in the nation.  

In addition: Ned, who had spent much of the past year returning from a nagging lower leg injury, leveraged this result into an over-all 1st Place (and 5 mile PB) at the Philadelphia Insurance Companies 22nd Annual Turkey trot, held, naturally, on Thanksgiving Day.  It’s been a year of redemption and triumph for the Phast Philadelphian, to which we say: Congrats and welcome back to the front of the pack!

All Photos: Simon Durkin

The night before the Fred Lebow Cross Country Championships, I was told a quote by Steve Prefontaine: “The only good race pace is suicide pace, and today’s a good day to die.”  In typical Ned fashion – against a field stacked with NYAC jerseys, a nationally ranked high-school athlete, and many of UA and CPTC’s strongest runners – I took Pre’s quote to heart and raced to win.

It was a disaster.

For those who don’t know the Van Cortlandt Park 5k layout, it starts with a flat and fast opening mile that seduces racers into Pre’s suicide pace.  The opening forces an aggressive start as, within the first 200 yards, the racers must jockey from a wide lane into a narrow gravel path.  They then fight for optimal positioning around a series a leftward turns circling several soccer fields.

Without regard for my own survival, I went out hard and found myself in 7th place at the first mile.  I was told that someone behind me ran a 4:57 opening mile, so I must have run 4:53-4:55.  Yes, that’s suicide pace.

But, the flat and fast abruptly ceased, as the next mile and a half led me through brutal undulations that turned my efforts to run a steady tempo into a stop-and-go fartlek.  I can’t remember much about miles 1.25 through 2.5, but I’m almost certain my pace hit 6:00 on some of the uphills and sub-4:30 on the downs.  I’m sure I ran over 5:50 pace, far from the steady 5:20’s I should be able to run for this distance.

Winding back onto the flats at mile 2.5, I wanted to kick.  CPTC’s number two passed me with 800 meters to go and I knew, for the sake of scoring, I couldn’t let him win.  I even failed in this regard.  I knew when he kicked from so far out that he would burnout.  So I sat and threw down the hammer in the final 250.  I started going after the UA guy in front of us.  I had CPTC buried.  But, in the final 25 yards, he pulled a Billy Mills and found a whole new gear.  He passed so quickly and so late that I couldn’t even respond.

Ultimately I finished 15th and ran 17:08, 13 seconds slower than my high school time on the same course.  I know I’m fit to run thirty seconds faster but I need to invert my approach: run the opening mile at a fast but controlled tempo pace, hang tough, then unleash a wild animal for the close.  I need to be more aggressive in the middle mile.  If a guy comes up on me, I need to tag him.  I can’t be scared of burning out.  And getting out-kicked in a final sprint… I won’t let that happen again.

-NC

This post is the opinion of the author and does not necessarily represent the opinion of the Dashing Whippets Running Team, its board, or its captains.